:INFO The 568-Page Family Novel and the Question It Forces The Corrections is a book that divides readers almost entirely on the question of length. Jonathan Franzen does not summarize or compress. He stays inside each character's experience until you understand not just what they want but how they arrived at wanting it. I came down firmly on the side of every page being necessary, but I understand the argument for the other side and I have made it myself in the middle of the winter sections set in Lithuania. :NOTE.half Franzen earns the length. The Enid chapters alone justify the commitment. | :COUNTER.half 568 Pages :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Jonathan Franzen] He was afraid of a world without children because children were safe and he was not. :JOURNEY Reading The Corrections 5 Most precise 4 Uncomfortable 3 Almost quit 5 Worth every page :NOTE The Corrections rewards patience in the same way a very long family dinner rewards patience. You need to be willing to sit with people who are not easy company. :POLL Where do you land on The Corrections? Every page was necessary and earned A brilliant novel that could have lost 100 pages I did not finish it and I am not sure I should try again I have not read it yet